Day Trip From Rome (Part 2), Villa Adriana (Hadrian’s Villa) Tivoli Italy
Day Trip From Rome (Part 2), Villa Adriana (Hadrian’s Villa) Tivoli Italy. Tivoli is an excellent day trip excursion destination from Rome. In part two of our day trip adventure from Rome to Tivoli we visit the ruins of Roman Emperor Hadrian’s Villa retreat from Rome.
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Tivoli Day Trip from Rome: Outstanding Villas - Through Eternity Tours
Explore a jaw-dropping ancient villa and a luxurious Renaissance palace on this spectacular day trip from Rome.
Our Tivoli Day Trip explores fantastic architecture in beautiful scenery. Discover the imposing ruins of Hadrian's Villa and the sumptuous Renaissance palace & gardens of Villa D'Este.
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Hadrian´s Villa, Tivoli - Italy 4K Travel Channel
The Hadrian's Villa or Villa Adriana, as it is called correctly, is about 30 km northeast of Rome near the town of Tivoli.
It is the largest and most elaborate palace that a Roman emperor ever build. It served as his summer residence and retirement home.
Around 300 AD, Emperor Constantine I had brought art treasures and precious marble to Byzantium. Later, it was looted by Cardinal d'Este, in order to decorate his villa in Tivoli . Archaeologists also brought a lot of mosaics in museums around the world.
It is a warm late autumn day and the sun shines pleasantly. Ideal for our sightseeing tour. A long avenue leads uphill to the northern boundary wall of the villa. In a small building is a model of the entire area, which we study in detail, since the area is huge and somewhat confusing.
Behind it is the Pecile.
Pecile, the name of the arcades incorrectly derives from the famous Stoa Poikile in Athens. The large artificial terrace was built on the hill and offers a wonderful view above the countryside of Rome.
The upper level was a quadriporticus-garden with long covered walkway delimiting a garden in whose center was a pond. Its purpose was thus to provide an all-weather space for a daily walk.
The west side consisted of four floors. The rooms with wooden floors and balconies were accessible via concrete stairs. The rooms thus provided living quarters for the villa’s service staff.
On the eastern end of the pond rises a high ruins called Garden with stage
The purpose of this building still remains unclear.
From here you can see the Heliocaminus Bath a dome-shaped building which served as a bath. It was equipped with floor and wall heating. To the right rises the Emperors Residence.
The Emperor resided in the top floor. The service rooms were located below.
We go further south and pass the small and great baths
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Die Hadriansvilla oder Villa Adriana, wie sie korrekt bezeichnet wird, liegt ca. 30 km nordöstlich von Rom nahe der Stadt Tivoli.
Sie ist die größte und aufwendigste Palastanlage, die je ein römische Kaiser erbauen ließ. Sie diente ihm als Sommerresidenz und Altersruhesitz.
Kaiser Konstantin I. ließ um 300 n. Chr. Kunstschätze und wertvollen Marmor nach Byzanz bringen. Später wurde sie von Kardinal d´Este weiter geplündert, der damit seine Villa in Tivoli schmückte. Auch Archäologen brachten viele Mosaike in Museen in aller Welt.
Es ist ein warmer Spätherbsttag und die Sonne scheint angenehm. Ideal für unsere Besichtigungstour. Eine lange Allee führt bergauf zur nördlichen Begrenzungsmauer der Villa. In einem kleinen Gebäude ist ein Modell der gesamten Anlage ausgestellt, das wir eingehend studieren, da das Gelände riesig und leicht unübersichtlich ist.
Dahinter befindet sich der Pecile.
Pecile, die Bezeichnung des Arkadenhofs, leitet sich fälschlicherweise von der berühmten Stoa Poikile in Athen ab. Die große künstliche Terrasse wurde auf dem Hügel errichtet und bietet einen wunderbaren Ausblick auf die Landschaft in Richtung Rom.
Die obere Ebene bildet ein Quadriportikus-Garten mit einem Teich in der Mitte, der von einem langen überdachten Gang begrenzt wird. Er diente den täglichen Spaziergängen bei jedem Wetter.
Die Westseite bestand aus vier Etagen. Die Zimmer mit Holzböden und Holzbalkonen waren über Betontreppen zugänglich. Hier befand sich der Wohnraum für Servicepersonal der Villa.
Am Östlichen Ende des Teiches erhebt sich eine hohe Ruine, genannt 'Garten mit Bühne', der Zweck dieses Gebäudes konnte nicht wirklich geklärt werden.
Von hier ist auch das Heliocaminus gut zu sehen. Ein kuppelförmiges Gebäude, das als Bad diente. Es war mit Fußboden- und Wandheizung ausgestattet. Rechts daneben erhebt sich die Residenz des Herrschers.
Er residierte im obersten Stockwerk. Darunter waren die Serviceräume untergebracht.
Wir gehen weiter Richtung Süden und passieren die kleine und große Therme
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Trip to Rome and Tivoli
Trip to Rome and Tivoli
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Tivoli-Rome Tour Guide (Alex) Hadrian's Villa Tour
Hello my name is Alex and I work as a tour guide in Rome and Tivoli .
Today I lead you into the great complex of Villa Adriana in Tivoli, 27 km away from Rome on the Via Tiburtina .The villa was built by Hadrian between 118 AD and 138 AD and extends over an area of 120 acres more or less the same that Pompei .
The in the video you can see the Canopus , an important pool built by Emperor Hadrian after his return from Egypt. The emperor was very impressed of his trip to Egypt cult's and to the particularities of the country and by the Egyptian religion. But he was particularly shocked by the tragedy of which he was the victim.
Adriano lost his great friend Antino! And the legend say that Antino has been sacrificed to extend the life of the emperor!
How to tell the stories and legends are so many ..What is the most correct is difficult to say . What we can find very interesting and that the shape of the canopy reminiscent of the River Nile or more exactly a tributary of the Nile channel now known as Abukir . After returning to Rome Hadrian wanted to deify Antino creating the city of Antipolis then enriching his mansion with many statues of Antino .
Today in Rome at the Vatican is still visible Antino Braschi and a rich collection of Egyptian sculpture in the Egyptian room of the Vatican Museums .
The Canopus is a long pool surrounded by beautiful caryatids and Roman sculptures reminiscent of the warriors on both sides and two
by Rome Tour Guide Alessandro Innocca
Mais conteúdo do guia em Roma em português:
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TRAVEL DIARY: A DAY IN TIVOLI, ITALY
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In this video we take a beautiful day trip from Rome to Tivoli. We visit Villa d'Este and Villa Adriana. Enjoy! :)
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Places to see in ( Tivoli - Italy ) Villa Adriana
Places to see in ( Tivoli - Italy ) Villa Adriana
Hadrian's Villa is a large Roman archaeological complex at Tivoli, Italy. It is the property of the Republic of Italy, and has been directed and run by the Polo Museale del Lazio since December 2014. The villa was constructed at Tibur (modern-day Tivoli) as a retreat from Rome for Roman Emperor Hadrian during the second and third decades of the 2nd century AD. Hadrian is said to have disliked the palace on the Palatine Hill in Rome, leading to the construction of the retreat. It was traditional that the Roman emperor had constructed a villa as a place to relax from everyday life, previous emperors and Romans with wealth such as Trajan had also constructed a villa. Many villas were also self-sustaining with small farms and did not need to import food.
During the decline of the Roman Empire in the 4th century, the villa gradually fell into disuse and was partially ruined as valuable statues and marble were taken away. The facility was used as a warehouse by both sides during the destructive Gothic War (535–554) between the Ostrogoths and Byzantines. Remains of lime kilns have been found, where marble from the complex was burned to extract lime for building material. In the 16th century, Cardinal Ippolito II d'Este had much of the remaining marble and statues in Hadrian's Villa removed to decorate his own Villa d'Este located nearby. Since that period excavations have sporadically turned up more fragments and sculptures, some of which have been kept in situ or housed on site in the display buildings.
Hadrian's Villa is a vast area of land with many pools, baths, fountains and classical Greek architecture set in what would have been a mixture of landscaped gardens, wilderness areas and cultivated farmlands. The buildings are constructed in travertine, brick, lime, pozzolana, and tufa. The complex contains over 30 buildings, covering an area of at least a square kilometre (250 acres) of which much is still unexcavated.
The site was chosen due to its abundant waters and readily available aqueducts that passed through Rome, including Anio Vetus, Anio Nobus, Aqua Marcia, and Aqua Claudia. The area was known as the location of villas before Hadrian obtained the property - it was, and still is, a picturesque area conveniently close to Rome but seemingly detached and separate. The villa was the greatest Roman example of an Alexandrian garden, recreating a sacred landscape.
Many beautiful artifacts have been unearthed and restored at the Villa, such as marble statues of Antinous, Hadrian's deified lover, accidentally drowned in Egypt, and mosaics from the theatre and baths. Artworks found in the villa include:
Discobolus
Dove Basin mosaic, copy of a famous Hellenistic mosaic, Capitoline Museums
Diana of Versailles, Louvre
Crouching Venus
Capitoline Antinous
Young Centaur and Old Centaur (Capitoline versions)
( Tivoli - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Tivoli . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Tivoli - Italy
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The Highlights of Rome Tour
This is the most popular tour of Rome. It is designed to let you see the cities highlights with stops at the Coliseum, the Trevi Fountain, the Spanish Steps the Vatican and more. Perfect for your first visit to Rome, especially if you only have a few hours. Offered by PrivateShoreTrips.com
Hadrian's Villa: A Massive Complex For One of Rome's Greatest Emperors
Built from 118-134 A.D., this was a fascinating place with ruins that were more intact than much of what exists in the Forum or Palatine Hill in Rome. It's even more interesting for those who have a particular interest in Hadrian, my personal favorite of Rome's emperors.
Many objects and works of art unearthed at Hadrian's Villa can now be found at numerous museums, including the Vatican Museums, Capitoline Museum, and Palazzo Massimo alle Terme in Rome, the British Museum in London, and the Louvre in Paris.
Places to see in ( Tivoli - Italy ) Villa d'Este
Places to see in ( Tivoli - Italy ) Villa d'Este
The Villa d'Este is a 16th-century villa in Tivoli, near Rome, famous for its terraced hillside Italian Renaissance garden and especially for its profusion of fountains. It is now an Italian state museum, and is listed as a UNESCO world heritage site.
Villa d’Este, masterpiece of the Italian Garden, is included in the UNESCO world heritage list. With its impressive concentration of fountains, nymphs, grottoes, plays of water, and music, it constitutes a much-copied model for European gardens in the mannerist and baroque styles.
The garden is generally considered within the larger –and altogether extraordinary-- context of Tivoli itself: its landscape, art and history which includes the important ruins of ancient villas such as the Villa Adriana, as well as a zone rich in caves and waterfalls displaying the unending battle between water and stone. The imposing constructions and the series of terraces above terraces bring to mind the hanging gardens of Babylon, one of the wonders of the ancient world. The addition of water-- including an aqueduct tunneling beneath the city -- evokes the engineering skill of the Romans themselves.
Cardinal Ippolito II d’Este, after the disappointment of a failed bid for the papacy, brought back to life here the splendor of the courts of Ferrara, Rome and Fontainebleau and revived the magnificence of Villa Adriana. Governor of Tivoli from 1550, he immediately nurtured the idea of realizing a garden in the hanging cliffs of the “Valle gaudente”, but it was only after 1560 that his architectural and iconographic program became clear—brainchild of the painter-architect-archeologist Pirro Ligorio and realized by court architect Alberto Galvani.
The rooms of the Palace were decorated under the tutelage of the stars of the late Roman Mannerism, such as Livio Agresti, Federico Zuccari, Durante Alberti, Girolamo Muziano, Cesare Nebbia and Antonio Tempesta. The work was almost complete at the time of the Cardinal’s death (1572).
From 1605 Cardinal Alessandro d'Este gave the go-ahead to a new progam of interventions not only to restore and repair the vegetation and the waterworks, but also to create a new series of innovations to the layout of the garden and the decorations of the fountains.
( Tivoli - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Tivoli . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Tivoli - Italy
Join us for more :
Day Trip to Tivoli, Italy
With its cool climate and plentiful springs, the town of Tivoli has been a popular retreat for Roman elites since ancient times. To get an idea of what near-limitless wealth could get you during two very different eras, we recommend visiting the town’s two UNESCO-listed villas, Villa d’Este and Hadrian’s Villa. Occasional seat of power at the height of the Roman empire, Hadrian’s Villa housed several thousand workers amidst temples, gardens, pools, and theaters. Villa D’Este is the epitome of Renaissance architecture. Exploring its countless fountains and seemingly endless gardens is a peaceful, if awe-inspiring, experience. We offer a small group tour that takes you through the scenic countryside of Lazio to Tivoli. Explore Tivoli on a custom tour of Italy with JayWay Travel:
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15. Rome and a Villa: Hadrian's Pantheon and Tivoli Retreat
Roman Architecture (HSAR 252)
Professor Kleiner features the architecture built in and around Rome during the reign of Hadrian. The lecture begins with the Temple of Venus and Roma, a Greek-style temple constructed near the Colosseum in Rome, which may have been designed by Hadrian himself. Professor Kleiner then turns to the Pantheon, a temple dedicated to all the gods that combines the marble porch and pediment of a traditional Greco-Roman temple with a vast concrete cylindrical drum, hemispherical dome, and central oculus. The porch serves to conceal the circular shape from view, but upon entering the structure the visitor is impressed by the massive interior space and theatrical play of light. The Pantheon represents the culmination of the Roman quest towards an architecture that shapes and dramatizes interior space. Professor Kleiner next discusses the Villa of Hadrian at Tivoli, a sprawling complex in which the emperor re-created buildings and works of art he observed during his empire-wide travels. The lecture concludes with a brief overview of the Mausoleum of Hadrian (the Castel Sant'Angelo), a round tomb that refers back to the Mausoleum of Augustus and served as the last resting place for Hadrian and the succeeding Antonine dynasty.
00:00 - Chapter 1. The Temple of Venus and Roma: A Greek Temple in Rome
15:14 - Chapter 2. The Pantheon: A Temple to All the Gods
29:57 - Chapter 3. The Pantheon and Its Impact on Later Architecture
47:48 - Chapter 4. Hadrians Villa at Tivoli: Travelogue and Retreat
56:21 - Chapter 5. Unique Designs at Hadrians Villa and the Castel Sant Angelo in Rome
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website:
This course was recorded in Spring 2009.
Underground tunnels revealed under Hadrian's villa
A network of tunnels have been discovered buried deep beneath the villa of Emperor Hadrian near Rome.
The villa itself has been described as an architectural masterpiece.
Now a team of caving specialists has discovered that it is even more impressive than previously thought.
Tivoli-Rome Tour Guide Hadrian's villa
My name is Alex and am a tour guide in Rome.
Why Why is it so important to have a guide in Rome?
Because Rome is the cradle of civilization. Be escorted by a privite tour guide in rome is very important! He will drive you in the various historical persiodi starting from 753, to now.
The tourist guide of Rome and also the person who supports you in making life easy on your journey in the choices and paths to follow evrey day
Imagine that every day there are more than 30,000 people a day visiting the Vatican Museums.
That's why is very important to be accompanied by a privite tourist guide.
Mais conteúdo do guia em Roma em português:
alexitalyiloveyou@gmail.com
Telefone/Whatsapp:
+39 33.55.73.3516
Trevi-Brunnen & Spanische Treppe in Rom - City Tour Guide
A nightly walk through the atmospheric old town of Rome to visit some of its most beautiful sights: the Trevi Fountain, Spanish Steps, Piazza di Spagna and more.
Abendlicher Rundgang durch die atmosphärische Altstadt Roms und Besuch einiger ihrer schönsten Sehenswürdigkeiten: Trevi Brunnen, Spanische Treppe, Piazza di Spagna und mehr.
Una passeggiata serale attraverso la città vecchia e suggestiva di Roma per visitare alcuni dei suoi più bei monumenti: la Fontana di Trevi, Piazza di Spagna, Piazza di Spagna e di più.
First day in Rome | Italy Vlogs #2: Liv Eef & Stel
We are staying in Rome for 3 days before we fly to England for the Summer, so we decided to make vlogs of the trip.
This is day one of our Italy vlogs!
Enjoy!
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Walk around Rome Italy 4K. Termini - Palazzo del Quirinale - Piazza San Pietro.
This walk through the capital of Italy, the city of Rome, begins at Termini Train Station and continues first to Basilica Papale di Santa Maria Maggiore, then to Palazzo del Quirinale and Fontana di Trevi, then via Piazza di Spagna to Piazza San Pietro and Basilica di San Pietro.
0:00 Termini Piazza dei Cinquecento
1:15 Via Giovanni Giolitti
3:30 Via Gioberti
7:15 Piazza di S. Maria Maggiore
9:40 Basilica Papale di Santa Maria Maggiore
30:00 Via dell'Esquilino
31:45 Piazza dell'Esquilino
35:40 Via Cavour
39:30 Termini Piazza dei Cinquecento
43:45 Viale Luigi Einaudi
45:10 Piazza della Repubblica
47:35 Fontana delle Naiadi
48:15 Santa Maria degli Angeli e dei Martiri
57:15 Via Vittorio Emanuele Orlando
57:25 Chiesa di Santa Susanna alle Terme di Diocleziano
58:10 Fontana del Mosè
58:20 Chiesa di Santa Maria della Vittoria
59:00 Via Venti Settembre
1:03:25 Le Quattro Fontane
1:04:20 Via del Quirinale
1:08:10 Villa Carlo Alberto al Quirinale
1:09:30 Piazza del Quirinale
1:10:05 Fontana dei Dioscuri
1:11:30 Palazzo della Consulta - Constitutional Court of Italy
1:12:10 Palazzo del Quirinale
1:16:10 Via della Dataria
1:18:40 Via di S. Vincenzo
1:20:20 Fontana di Trevi
1:29:50 Via della Stamperia
1:31:40 Via del Tritone
1:37:00 Piazza Barberini Fontana del Tritone
1:43:55 Via Sistina
1:49:25 Piazza della Trinità dei Monti Obelisco Sallustiano Trinità dei Monti
1:51:55 Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti
1:55:30 Piazza di Spagna Fontana della Barcaccia
1:56:25 Piazza Mignanelli Colonna dell'Immacolata
2:05:08 Via dei Condotti
2:08:20 Largo Carlo Goldoni
2:09:20 Via Tomacelli
2:13:15 Ponte Cavour
2:16:30 Via Vittoria Colonna
2:19:00 Corte Suprema di Cassazione
2:19:20 Piazza Cavour
2:22:50 Monumento statua Camillo Benso Conte di Cavour
2:23:40 Chiesa Valdese Cinema Adriano
2:27:20 Procura Generale della Repubblica Italiana presso la Corte di Appello di Roma
2:27:55 Piazza Adriana Parco della Mole Adriana
2:31:30 Castel Sant'Angelo Lungotevere Castello
2:33:55 Ponte Sant'Angelo
2:41:15 Via della Conciliazione
2:48:45 Vatican Piazza San Pietro Basilica di San Pietro
Other my videos 4K 2019
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Rome
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Rome, Italy - Full Day Sightseeing City Tour
Top Tourist Attractions - Travel Guide - Things to do in Rome
Rome is the capital city of Italy and a special commune. Rome also serves as the capital of the Lazio region. With 2.873 million residents in 1,285 km2 (496.1 sq mi), it is also the country's most populated commune. It is the fourth-most populous city in the European Union by population within city limits. It is the center of the Metropolitan City of Rome, which has a population of 4.3 million residents.
Rome is a journey into the past and Rome is a historical powerhouse!!!
Top 50 Tourist Attractions in Rome are please see below in Video description:
1. Colloseum
2. St. Peter's Basilica
3. Roman Forum
4. Pantheon
5. Trevi Fountain
6. Sistine Chapel
7. Vatican Museums
8. Piazza Navona
9. Spanish Steps
10. Castel Sant'Angelo
11. Palatine Hill
12. Trastevere
13. Villa Borghese gardens
14. Piazza di Spagna
15. Trevi
16. Capitoline Hill
17. St. Peter's Square
18. Piazza Venezia
19. Piazza del Popolo
20. Galleria Borghese
21. Campo de' Fiori
22. Altare della Patria
23. Santa Maria Maggiore
24. Circus Maximus
25. Bocca della Verità
26. Capitoline Museums
27. Tiber
28. Via Francigena
29. Archbasilica of St. John Lateran
30. Villa d'Este
31. Baths of Caracalla
32. Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi
33. Arch of Constantine
34. Ponte Sant'Angelo
35. Janiculum
36. Hadrian's Villa
37. Quirinal Palace
38. Tiber Island
39. Pincian Hill
40. Aventine Hill
41. Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls
42. Largo di Torre Argentina
43. Arch of Titus
44. Domus Aurea
45. Trajan's Column
46. Piazza Barberini
47. Catacombs of Rome
48. Via Veneto
49. EUR, Rome
50. Trajan's Market
Rome Streets are:
- Via Tuscolana, Rome
- Via Appia Nuova, Rome
- Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano, Rome
- Piazza di S. Giovanni in Laterano, Rome
- Obelisco Lateranense, Rome
- Via dell'Amba Aradam, Rome
- Via della Navicella, Rome
- Via claudia, Rome
- Piazza del Colosseo, Rome
- Via di San Gregorio, Rome
- Piazza di Porta Capena, Rome
- Viale delle Terme di Caracalla, Rome
- Via Cristoforo Colombo, Rome
- Corso d'Italia, Rome
- Viale del Muro Torto, Rome
- Piazza del Popolo, Rome
- Ponte Regina Margherita, Rome
- Lungotevere dei Mellini, Rome
- Lungotevere Prati, Rome
- Quadriga della Giustizia - di Ettore Ximenes, Rome
- Fontana del Palazzo di Giustizia Lungotevere, Rome
- Piazza Adriana, Rome
- Castel Sant' Angelo Suite B&B, Rome
- Largo Giovanni XXIII, Rome
- Lungotevere Gianicolense, Rome
- Ponte Giuseppe Mazzini bridge, Rome
- Lungotevere dei Sangallo, Rome
- Lungotevere dei Fiorentini, Rome
- Ponte Vittorio Emanuele II bridge, Rome
- Castel Sant'Angelo, Rome
- Via della Conciliazione, Vatican City
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Villa d'Este, a garden with 500 sources
Villa d'Este, a World Heritage, plays one of the wonders of the world: the garden of Babylon. The mansion of Cardinal Ippolito II d'Este, refuge of the composer Liszt and a Benedictine monastery hidden among gardens and fountains for more than eight centuries of history.
Ippolito II d'Este, who was appointed cardinal in 1539, was one of the most influential person in the French political and social life and one of the possible candidates for successor of Peter.
The Cardinal moved to Rome and was surrounded by artists and writers. There, Pope Julius III appointed him governor of the town of Tivoli, near Rome. This will also become the owner of the villa, which had been confiscated to the order of the Benedictines.
From 1550 until 1572 Cardinal rebuilt the village, trying to be faithful to the original. For this was surrounded by the best architects, sculptors and fresco painters of the era.
On the so-called mountain of joy 'designed a garden with about 500 fountains and waterfalls that provide water through a hydraulic system invented in Roman times.
Since 1605, Cardinal Alexander East, new owner of the villa, improvement and refurbishment some of sources, with the help of sculptor Borromini.
However, in the eighteenth century, the town has deteriorated due to neglect. Her condition worsened with the arrival of the Dukes of Hasburgo, which took a lot of artwork.
The town had to wait for the arrival of Cardinal Gustav von Hohenlohe, in the mid-nineteenth century to regain its glory of the early years.
Following the statement of the First World War, this became the property of the Italian state and opened to the public.
In these spectacular gardens, includes a water-powered organ, the Hungarian musician Franz Liszt composed his piece for piano 'water games at Villa d'Este and held one of his last concerts. .
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ROME REPORTS, romereports.com, is an independent international TV News Agency based in Rome covering the activity of the Pope, the life of the Vatican and current social, cultural and religious debates. Reporting on the Catholic Church requires proximity to the source, in-depth knowledge of the Institution, and a high standard of creativity and technical excellence.
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